Jose Luis Magana / AP file ...msnbc
.....note: LEFT armWill there need to be an IMAGE placed over the Mark for
instant recognition ??

The earlier versions of Verichip were "number only". Then
Applied Digital Solutions received FDA approval (
because they contained no medical information on the chip ).
Since then ( Jan. 05 ) ads has gone to a "read chip,"
which now has information scripted onto it ( Social Security
number etc. ) .It is currently working on a "read-write"
chip that can be updated. It now can contain
medical information.

VeriChip for SYSTEMS
access :It has been suggested that eventually
VeriChip could replace credit cards and other forms of
identification cards with the advantage that, unlike their
plastic equivalents, they are almost impossible to lose.

From the Newswire: Fair educational use

Hidden
surveillance cameras in the workplace ... genetic testing , DNAIn all other provinces, including Ontario, there
is no legislation specifically governing employee privacy in the
workplace, Levin said. He called on the province to amend its
Employee Standards Act to put in place at least
minimal guarantees, as West Virginia has done, that
there will be no surveillance in place in restrooms,
shower stalls or other personal space
You know if you create databases governments may want to have
access to them, he said.
In a democracy, said Levin, It's not
always a good thing to create a database simply because you have
some new technology that can create a database about your
employees.Rosenberg is also worried about the increasing use of RFID
technology to track people, not just animals.
As of 2004, 40 million Americans were already
carrying an RFID tag, or implantable computer chip,
Rosenberg saidhttp://www.itbusiness.ca/it/client/en/home/News.asp?id=42416

CityWatch and Six Sigma Security on VeriChip
"No one I spoke with at Six Sigma Security or at
CityWatcher knew that the VeriChip had been hacked,
McIntyre observed. They were also surprised to hear of VeriChips downsides as a medical device. It was clear they
werent aware of some of the controversy surrounding the
implant.
Although CityWatcher reportedly does not require its employees to
take an implant to keep their jobs, Katherine Albrecht,
Spychips co-author and outspoken critic of the
VeriChip, says the chipping sets an unsettling precedent.
Its wrong to link a persons paycheck with
getting an implant, she said. Once people begin
voluntarily getting chipped to perform their job
duties, it wont be long before pressure gets applied to
those who refuse
"The company hopes the VeriChip will beef up its proximity
or prox card security system that controls access to
the room where the video footage is stored, said Gary Retherford
of Six Sigma Security, Inc., the company that provided the
VeriChip technology. The prox card is a system that can be
compromised, said Retherford, referring to the cards
well-known vulnerability to hackers. He explained that chipping
employees was a move to increase the layer of security ...
It was attractive because it could be integrated with the
existing system"http://www.chiefengineer.org/content/content_display.cfm/seqnumber_content/2849.htm

Sixsigma -- web connection
to chipping
CINCINNATI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In the continued trend of adding
security resellers and distributors, sixsigmasecurity.net
has included CC&C Management Services of Washington D.C., to
the list of companies that represent the VeriGuard Suite of
products, including the human implantable RFID microchip
CC&C Management Services, LLC, formerly known as Contracts
Consultants & Co., LLC, is the Premier Relocation
Planning and Move Management Company in the Washington, DC
metropolitan area. Other services include Logistics
(transportation, building commissioning services, Furniture,
Fixtures & Equipment inventory with or without Barcode or
RFID (radio frequency identification)); Professional Staffing;
and Management Consulting.
Visit www.sixsigmasecurity.net for a list of security
integrators and distributors.
Sixsigmasecurity.net is the Internet's
portal to the Human Implantable RFID Microchip,
used in Human Identification for security applications.http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20061116005514&newsLang=en

Lee Tien
"This may be appropriate for cattle, pets or packages, but
for humans it is a very different issue," said Lee Tien,
an attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
technology and civil liberties group in San Francisco, Calif.
In the case of workers like those at the Ohio security firm, the
signal from the chip triggers the reader to search for
a password, which, in turn, can open a door, for example
Paula Brantner, an attorney for Workplace Fairness, a workers'
advocacy group in San Francisco, said she expected workers would
resent having chips placed under their skin.
"This is incredible. It raises something out of `1984.'
It is a very invasive way of keeping tabs on your workers,"
she said.http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2006/02/13/1368724.htm

Six-Sigma Security installs VeriGuard with chip-access systemCINCINNATI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 6, 2006--Six
Sigma Security(TM), Inc, announced today the successful
installation and integration of the access control
module of VeriChip Corp's VeriGuard(TM) Security Suite,
including VeriChip's human-implantable RFID microchip,
as part of an integrated security solution for CityWatcher.com.
As a provider of video surveillance, monitoring and video storage
for government and business, CityWatcher.com chose VeriChip Corp.
to augment and enhance its overall security solution.
Sean Darks, CityWatcher CEO stated that, "Whereas
CityWatcher.com is a provider of video solutions for government
and business, we wanted to not only improve security for highly
secure areas, but wanted do so with the next
generation of product that would integrate with our existing
system. The VeriChip family of RFID security products was able to
accomplish that goalThe installation included successfully
integrating the VeriGuard system with CityWatcher's existing
access control system manufactured by Sielox (formerly Checkpoint
Access Systems), a subsidiary of LG Corp. ...
Dr. Jim Scott with Doctor's Urgent Care of Milford, OH performed
the application of the implantable microchip. With
eight facilities throughout Cincinnati, Northern Kentucky,
Middletown, and Dayton; Doctor's Urgent Care has 10
physicians available at their facilities to implant the
microchip, which is used for both medical, as well as security
purposeshttp://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20060206005670&newsLang=en

VeriChip - VeriGuardVERIGUARD
S.A.C.(secure access
control)
Definition of VeriGuard:The VeriGuard-S.A.C. reader consists of a
high-powered RFID antenna encased in a
durable plastic panel that can be mounted near a
doorway or building entrance. The VeriGuard-S.A.C. scanner
"reads" a passingsubdermal VeriChip
by emitting a low-frequency radio signal and receiving a return
radio signal sent by the VeriChip's
transponder.

The hardware and software components of the VeriGuard-S.A.C.
system work together to authenticate personnel who are
authorized to enter a given building or facility and unlock a
secure doorway if the person has authorized access. The
VeriGuard-S.A.C. panel can also be placed in strategic locations
within a building or facility to "track" the
location and movements of authorized personnel inside a
secure area. VeriGuard-S.A.C. could function as a stand-alone,
tamper-proof personal verification secure access technology or it
could operate in conjunction with other security technologies
such as standard ID badges, smart cards and advanced biometric
devices (e.g. retina scanners, thumbprint readers or face
recognition devices). The Company envisions incorporating
variations of the VeriGuard solution into "Trusted
Traveler" and residential security programs.

VeriTrack ( for companies )VeriTrack is designed
to track, monitor and protect all assets within an organization
or company, including people.Pre-authorization is
automated by linking particular assets to personnel tags and
creating an electronic relationship between the two tags.http://www.4verichip.com/veritrack.htm

NFC
Smart Card for access to wilderness areas
--- MIFARE DESFire
20 Million projected
Bureau of Land Management; Dept. of Interior ( DOI ) 70,000
NASA -- physical access systemBy the end of this year, some 20,000 DOI
employees will have been issued the GSC-IS
V2.1-compliant smart cards with the other 50,000
coming online by the end of 2005.Donelson is one of the key proponents driving the
U.S. government toward using smart card solutions standardized on
GSC-IS to ensure a secure and interoperable method of access
control and identification. By requiring the storage and
contactless retrieval of basic employee information per the
GSC-IS guidelines, a U.S. DoI employee could also gain access to
other departments' facilities with this smart card. Donelson,
also the chairman of the Interoperability Advisory Board, is
working with other agencies, including NASA, U.S. Department of
Homeland Security and the Veterans Administration through the
U.S. General Services Administration, to procure larger volumes
of cards meeting GSC-IS V2.2. Total volumes of compliant cards
ordered on this consolidated purchase are expected to exceed 20
million units over the next few years.

What about PDL s?Externally-worn
transmitters do work with the GPS global satellite system, yet
the PDL
( personal location device) would be the very first thing that
kidnappers would remove from the person.
That would make the PDL totally useless
in a kidnapping situation.

What does help ? Prayer. Calling upon God is the strongest force
of help in times of kidnapping.
In Psalm 91, God tells us of His great protection for us.
He keeps us from all harm because of our love
for Him.

Do you have the fear ( reverence) of God, and the love of Jesus
Christ ? Then Psalm 91 is for you.Jesus
Christ is the only true Security there is.
All that technology can do is to track a person in a controlled
environment.
The more a person feels controlled and monitored , the more that
person resents the yoke around his life.

More news articles

Brain-waves : "pass-thoughts" to replace fingerprints for access ID
Canadian researchers hope to soon be able to use brain waves
to unlock doors and get access to bank accounts
A user would simply think their
password, said Thorpe, who hopes to develop the first
biometric security device to read your mind to authenticate
users.
Her idea, yet to be proven viable for commercial application,
assumes that brainwave signals, like fingerprints, vary slightly
from person to person, even when they think alike.
The latest electroencephalogram (EEG) hardware, which measures
electrical signals in the brain, consists of a costly bowl-shaped
cap dotted with electrodes that takes time to put on and requires
a gel be smeared on the persons head to bridge the gap
between the electrodes and their scalp.http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2005%5C12%5C15%5Cstory_15-12-2005_pg1_10

Live Scan
electronically sends fingerprint to DoJ for security clearance --
Dec. 13, 2005
Dept. of Justice .. pre-registration required ( 3 days .... 72
hours advance time) THE LIVE SCAN PROCESS IS REPLACING FINGERPRINT CARDS.
Live Scan technology electronically transmits fingerprints
directly to the Department of Justice (DOJ) and reduces delays
with processing hardcopy cards. Live scan fingerprints that
result in clearances are now transmitted electronically to
the ATCS registry,
usually within 72 hoursDOJ fingerprint results are sent to the Aide and
Technician Certification Section (ATCS) for certification as
a nurse assistant or home health aide. DOJ also send
fingerprint results to ATCS for certain employees of
Intermediate Care Facilities for the Developmentally Disabled,
Adult Day Health Care facilities, and Home Health Agencies.http://www.dhs.ca.gov/lnc/cert/Fingerprint.htm

Veriguard sensors and implantable rfid To those wishing to see the latest in RFID
security solutions - including applications using
implantable, wearable, and attachable RFID tag technology -
we extend the invitation to visit the VeriChip booth at
ASIS." At the ASIS show http://www.asisonline.org. ,
VeriChip Corporation will be demonstrating its chip technology
integratedwith its security application, VeriGuard.
VeriGuard, a featured new product by ASIS this year, provides
individual location and distress alert capability, access
control, and asset tracking for the identification, location, and
protection of individuals and assets. VeriChip's market-leading
infant protection and wander prevention solutions will also be on
display.http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050912/125659.html?.v=1

"dogtag" The chip has a special polyethylene
sheath that helps skin bond to it so it stays in place.
It has no battery, and is said to have an expected lifespan up to
20 years.It has been suggested that eventually VeriChip could replace credit cards
and other forms of identification cards with the advantage that,
unlike their plastic equivalents, they are almost impossible to
lose. http://www.cbronline.com/article_news.asp?guid=FAB1FE4D-C713-4CC4-9DF9-B4C3B18212E9

An internal chip to
react with external devices With the Company's recent acquisitions, the
VeriGuard system now features both implantable and wearable RFID
access control and monitoring technology. Implantable RFID chips
and/or wearable RFID bracelets and tags integrate seamlessly into
the new VeriGuard system.VeriChip is a subsidiary of Applied Digital and
the only company to provide both implanted and external RFID
identification and security solutions for people, their assets, and
their environments. (
Ed : rfid tags everywhere
)

DAC rfid card for Computer ACCESS by Mark BaardThe DAC, which stands for Department
of Homeland Security Access Card, will carry a
digital copy of its bearer's fingerprint and other personally
identifiable information. It will use radio-frequency
identification and Bluetooth technologies to communicate with
reader devices at the department's offices.

"The card provides one type of authentication for
all forms of access (physical, wired and wireless),"
said DHS Director of Authentication Technologies Joseph
Broghamer, who participated in a wireless technology conference
in Washington, D.C., last week.

The DAC will feature a high-resolution image of its bearer and
a hard-to-duplicate holographic image. The
key identifier stored on the DAC, however, will be a record of
the bearer's biometric data (in this case, a fingerprint) that
can be read by special devices attached to DHS computers

For example, rather than entering a user name and
password, DHS workers will log on to their computers by sliding
their DAC into a special keyboard and pressing their finger on
the keyboard's fingerprint-reader pad. The keyboard will then
authorize workers by comparing their physical fingerprint to the
card's fingerprint record.

But the DAC's RFID chip and its Bluetooth-enabled holder will
make it a target for hackers and spies with wireless readers, who
could be lurking in commissaries, coffee shops, bars and subway
stations around the Capitol.

But hackers will be able to eavesdrop on
transmissions between the DAC and RFID readers every time the
card is read, and at distances up to "tens of feet,
potentially," said Juels. http://www.rr-bb.com/showthread.php?t=190531

Security Expert takes the VeriChip for Access
Joseph Krull.... an internationally recognized security
and privacy authoritytakes the chip in the arm
Soon to be in right hand ? see verification
Internet-access; Mobile-phone access; military "dogtag"
ID ;"I envision powerful future applications for
VeriChip(TM), including important computer and
logical security authentication
mechanisms, identify theft protection and even electronic
'dogtags' for military personnel," Krull stated. Mr.
Krull is in the process of placing his personal medical
information in VeriChip's secure database for linked access to
his RFIDmicrotransponder's unique 16-digit
verification number, facilitating authorized access
to the data through VeriChip's proprietary hand-held scanner
system.
"using a computer on the Internet "

Digital Defense : Factor 4biocard; Irongate access (
computer and building)
April 12, 2005--Digital Defense Group, a developer and supplier
of innovative biometric security products, has developed a completely
self-contained, wireless, biometric security device that grants
secure building and computer access through the use of a
fingerprint, without compromising a user's biometric privacy
during enrollment or authentication.
Digital Defense(TM) will unveil and demonstrate the innovative
new device, called the Factor4(TM) biocard, at
the 2005 CardTech/SecurTech Conference at the Mandalay Bay
Convention Center in Las Vegas, April 12-14.
Factor4 and a related product, IronGate(TM),
scheduled for release later this year, are the first such
biometric security access products to take the form of a credit
card.http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20050412005278&newsLang=en

Joseph Krull takes Chip
Applied Digital (NASDAQ: ADSX - News), a provider
of Security Through Innovation(TM), announced today that Joseph
E. Krull, CPP, CISSP, IAM, an internationally recognized security
and privacy authority, recently received a VeriChip to underscore
his strong support for this unique identification
technology.
Mr. Krull will be demonstrating the VeriChip and its associated
hand-held reader at the RSA Conference in San
Francisco from February 15-17. He will also be available to
provide his personal observations of the chipping process at
Virtual Corporation's Booth #244 http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050208/85209_1.html

Applying VeriChip to IndustryAt this year's annual event, internationally renowned
experts and key players in the ID industry will address the most
relevant issues in the fields of security, government, retail,
logistics and supply chain, presenting information on the
evolution of the core technologies upon which future auto ID
systems will be built. Leading-edge solutions will be
presented from many different market segments, including the
latest applications of automatic data collection, smart cards,
biometrics and RFID technology.
VeriChip is already being utilized internationally for
identification and related security purposes. http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/041005/55385_1.html

ID World http://www.idworldonline.com/
Chip in arm for security Mexico's attorney general said on Monday he had had a
microchip inserted under the skin of one of his arms to give him
access to a new crime database and also enable him to be traced
if he is ever abducted.
Attorney General Rafael Macedo said a number of his staff had
also been fitted with chips which will give them exclusive and
secure access to a national, computerized database for crime
investigators that went live on Monday.
"It's an area of high security, it's necessary that we have
access to this, through a chip, which what's more is
unremovable," Macedo told reporters.
"The system is here and I already
have it. It's solely for access, for safety and so that I can be
located at any moment wherever I am," he said, admitting the
chip hurt "a little."http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=oddlyEnoughNews&storyID=5657921http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/040714/mexico_chip_implants_13.html

1,000 people in Mexico
take the VeriChipAbout 1,000 people in Mexico have had the
VeriChip implanted, said Antonio Aceves,
president of Solusat,
the chip's Mexican distributor. He said most customers have had medical
problems.http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/07/16/mexico_hopes_chip_signals_gain_vs_crime/
The Need for Identity ManagementThe real challenge was getting both companies
comfortable with the idea of linking their systems, so when an
employee logs on to the GM portal, he or she is automatically
able to access the financial-services provider's systems as well.
There were lots of discussions over "the comfort level of
doing this and how it could affect the business relationship and
relationship with the employee," Taggart says. There were
lots of conversations between legal groups, he adds. .....But that goal is still down the road. One step
the industry still needs to take is to adopt interoperable
standards so various products can work together without a lot of
manual integration. Another problem: Most provisioning,
access-control, and identity-management applications don't
support a wide enough variety of applications, databases, and
operating systems, says Gene Fredriksen, VP for information
security at Raymond James & Associates. The
financial-services firm is evaluating identity-management
vendors. "So far, it doesn't seem like any single vendor can
do everything or provide everything you need," he says. http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=18312163

Wall-mounted
scanner to read subdermal chip for accessWill
ACCESS be DENIED ??Named "VeriGuard-S.A.C." (Secure Access
Control), the newly developed device represents the
first-ever deployment of a wall-mounted RFID (radio
frequency identification) subdermal VeriChip reader
that has been integrated into a building-access security system.
In its present configuration - already installed and functioning
- the new VeriGuard-S.A.C. reader consists of a high-powered RFID
antenna encased in a durable plastic panel that can be mounted
near a doorway or building entrance. The
VeriGuard-S.A.C. scanner "reads" a passing subdermal
VeriChip by emitting a low-frequency radio signal and receiving a
return radio signal sent by the VeriChip's transponder.

The VeriGuard-S.A.C. system, building on the Company's
previously announced "Protected by VeriChip"

The hardware and software components of the
VeriGuard-S.A.C. system work together to authenticate
personnel who are authorized to enter a given building or
facility and unlock a secure doorway if the person has authorized
access. The VeriGuard-S.A.C. panel can also be placed in
strategic locations within a building or facility to "track"
the location and movements of authorized personnel inside a
secure area.

The accompanying software maintains a database of authorized
personnel, including key biometric information and/or
photo-IDs. The sophisticated software also maintains a
log of all authorized entry or denial "events" and
can be programmed for various time zones to admit authorized
personnel at specific times but deny access at other times.
The system can also be used to permit access to certain areas of
a facility but deny access to high-security areashttp://biz.yahoo.com/bw/031009/95382_1.html

Electronic device,namely attachable or
implantable microchip that stores, transmits and receives
identification information, and
physiological information in order to identify,
monitor and management persons and animals
including the monitoring of the physiological
parameters, and geographic location of those
persons and animals; physiological monitoring product, namely
radio frequency identification device and associated
communications computer hardware and computer software for use in
measuring, collecting, storing, and
transmitting, physiological parameters, personal
information, and geographic location;
computer hardware and software used to transmit data regarding
identification from persons and animals to a
central location[databank]http://finance.messages.yahoo.com/bbs?.mm=FN&action=m&board=4687959&tid=actc&sid=4687959&mid=837602

Note :
This article comes from a GOVERNMENT Tech news which means a
heads-up....
plus it is reporting on old news ( Nov --2003).
So the emphasis here is upon VeriPAY ( global payment
System) , rather than VeriChip.
We could conclude then that the financial transactions among the
global banking System could be preparing to implement the 666
economic-commercial chip soon .Another
heads-up !Gimme Some Skin............ ( VeriPAY ..payment
technology) Applied Digital Solutions' CEO told attendees of the ID
World 2003 in Paris held in late November, that the company's
newest subdermal radio frequency identification (RFID)
application is nearly ready for market.

VeriPay, a secure, subdermal RFID payment technology
for cash and credit transactions, could make physical money
obsolete. The payment technology
relies on the company's VeriChip, which is about the size of a
grain of rice. VeriChip is a subdermal RFID microchip already
used in a variety of security, financial, emergency
identification and other applications.

Currently the company sells RFID chips to people with medical
conditions, such as diabetes or allergies to common medications.
Since the chips are implanted under the skin, emergency response
personnel have a nearly fool-proof way to access data about a
person's medical needs.

The company said VeriPay's unique, subdermal format offers a much
more secure, tamper-proof and loss-proof RFID solution to payment
technologies. Applied
Digital Solutions said the company is working with banking and
credit companies to develop specific commercial applications --
beginning with appropriate pilot programs and other market tests
--
for the VeriPay subdermal RFID solution.http://www.govtech.net/magazine/story.php?id=83625&issue=1:2004

ADSX aquires eXI wireless .... acquisition by Applied
Digital
eXI will be joining forces with Verichip Corporation, a
subsidiary of
Applied Digital, whose primary focus is to build an RFID company
focused onhuman applications. We at eXI have built a
robust technology and look forward
to joining forces with the Verichip team to expand the
market opportunity for
our collective technology and products."

eXI Wireless Inc. is a pioneer in wireless identification,
control, andlocation technologies that provide peace of mind
to groups wanting to protect,
track, and locate their individuals and assets.
With over 20 years experience,
eXI is behind some of the industry's first patient
wandering, infant
protection, and tool tracking systems uniquely
combining Auto-ID (e.g. RFID,
bar code) and real-time location technologies in its
state-of-the-art,unobtrusive[ Ed. note: hidden] solutions.

Through eXI's continued wireless innovation, end
customers gain the protection, cost savings, operating
efficiencies, and
overall peace of mind they require when it comes to their people
and assets.
Vendors looking to improve their product offerings through the
use of eXI's
RFID technology gain the expertise and end result they require
quickly and
cost effectively. For more information on eXI Wireless Inc.,
please visithttp://www.exi.com

Below is an article written over a year ago regarding VeriGuard
and people-tracking. Just a reminder that VeriChip by
itself can track no one. It is too small to have a
transmitter. It can only communicate when
activated by a scanner.
Only an externally worn device ( which is bigger) can have GPS
tracking abilities.

GSC-IS Satellite for access controlThe U.S. space agency will run a trial of an RFID-based
access control system, the first in the world to use the
Government Smart Card Interoperability Specification (GSC-IS)
standard.
By Jonathan Collins
Aug. 5, 2004NASA, the U.S. governments space agency,
will run a trial of a new access control system that could see
100,000 NASA employees and contractors using RFID to
verify access to a number of NASA sites before the end
of next year.
During the next three months, 2,000 NASA employees will use the
technology to gain access to areas in the NASA
Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama. If the trial is
successful and the U.S. Office of Management and Budget approves
funding for the system, NASA will deploy more than 100,000
smart cards in 2005. The pilot follows initial testing of the
technology at NASA. http://www.rfidjournal.com/article/articleview/1074/1/1/

There is an excellent article in the
October 2004 issue of The New American by Christopher
S. Bentley that helps to explain the convoluted thinking in
governments today and that is this:
Because the world runs on business, all governments want all
countries open to commerce, regardless of
morals and ethics and common sense.http://www.thenewamerican.com/tna/2004/10-04-2004/watchers.htm

In order to have this, they must have a way of dealing with
non-desirables within each nation.
These non-desirables may be "terrorists" or
"anarchists" or "combatants" or
"dissenters" or whatever.
But the point is , they are politically incorrect people and must
be identified individually, rather than nationally or
collectively.

The silver bullet --- or subdermal microchip --- that solves
this problem is VeriChip. It identifies persons, rather than
groups or nations. Now we can build global empires based not upon
Godly principles, but upon personal preference.
And just think of the euphoric sense of power this gives
government to isolate individuals, rather than detain a
group of people who might rally to their own defense.

Now the enemy is not Arabs, or Moslems or Islamists or foreigners
or "rogue nations" or even mainstream
"christians". The politically-incorrect
"enemy" now also includes a person who thinks
for himself and acts in accordance with his
Biblically-enlightened conscience... a rare breed indeed, and an
easy target and prey for wolves to surround and attack.

When business joins hands with government to produce Tyrus, the
nodding mainstream "christians" will find out they have been used (
Revelation 17 )

Here is a quote from the October issue of The New American :fair-educational use[ Robert A. ] Pastors [
CFR ] "most important" recommendation is for the
"Department of Homeland Security [to] expand its mission to
include continental security  a shift best achieved by
incorporating Mexican and Canadian perspectives and personnel
into its design and operation." The "perspective"
of the incurably corrupt and relentlessly predatory Mexican
government is typified by its willingness to use VeriChip
technology against its increasingly helpless -population. .......

During his first term, Mr. Bush has worked consistently to
integrate our economy and security system with that of Mexico.
And of course, he has presided over the creation of an immense
Homeland Security department with an open-ended mandate to treat
U.S. citizens  not foreign terrorists  as the chief
threat to public order. If elected to a second term, Bush, like
Kerry, would undoubtedly pursue a politically merged Western
Hemisphere, with a security perimeter that would include both
North and South America.

A dying George Orwell wrote Nineteen Eighty-Four as a
warning to us," [ Gary ] Allen soberly concluded.
"His message is that once political and scientific power are
centralized we will have no chance to escape
tyranny."

Gary Allen is the author of the much acclaimed book "None
Dare Call It Conspiracy".